31 Mich. 309 | Mich. | 1875
The plaintiff sued the defendant in case to recover of him for having, as he alleged, enticed into his service and harbored his minor son, a young man about nineteen years of age. The evidence went to show that the parties having been near neighbors in Cooper, Kalamazoo county, the defendant removed to Missouri, and, without plaintiff’s knowledge or assent, and against his wishes and desire, persuaded and induced the young man to leave his father, the plaintiff, and go to defendant’s place in Missouri, and there work for the latter on his promise of wages; that the defendant, besides holding out inducements to the young man to go and enter his service, furnished money to pay his fare, and that in consequence he went to Missouri about the 23d of May, 1870, and worked for defendant and remained there until April, 1871, when an elder brother, who was sent after him by defendant, induced him to return.
The main defense to the action consisted of evidence, admitted under objection, that shortly before this action was brought the plaintiff sued the defendant in assumpsit before a justice, to recover on the basis of contract for the minor’s services; that the cause was brought to trial before a jury, and a hearing had upon the merits; that the case was submitted but subsequently discontinued after a disagreement of the jury.
This course of the plaintiff, the defendant claimed, constituted-a decisive election by the former to treat the transaction as one of contract and not tort, and he insisted the proceedings effectually put an end to any right the plaintiff may have had before, or might otherwise have had, to count
In regard to this part of the case, the court told the jury in. substance, that it was competent for the plaintiff to ignore the ground of tort involved in the defendant’s arrangement with the minor, and to treat the transaction as one of contract between the plaintiff and defendant, to be enforced agreeably to its nature; and that if the jury were satisfied that the plaintiff, with full knowledge of all the facts going to show the defendant committed a tort, had yet elected to place his right on the basis of contract, and had prosecuted a suit on that theory and foundation down to the submission of the case to a jury, he could not afterwards turn round, repudiate such election, and maintain a suit in tort; but that if the plaintiff prosecuted his first suit in question in ignorance, or under misapprehension of the facts to show the tortious character of defendant’s conduct in relation to the transaction, he would not be precluded from maintaining his action founded on the wrong.
The jury found for the defendant, and tbe plaintiff has brought error. Tbe fact is undisputed, that before this suit the plaintiff prosecuted, as before mentioned, on the basis of agreement, for the purpose of recovering his son’s wages. There is no controversy in regard to the proceedings then had. An objection was taken to the admission of the proof on two grounds; but the first is not noticed in the brief, and was not alluded to in argument; and the second must stand or fall with the charge which involves the same point. As the case is presented, the judgment against the plaintiff must stand if the defendant’s position in regard to the election of remedy prevails; because the facts upon which that position depends are in no manner questioned, and if tbe position itself is sound, the plaintiff was not entitled to recover, no matter what view might be taken of the other points made by him.
The general doctrine applicable to the feature of the case we are considering, appears to be well settled.
As there was no evidence or claim that the parties ever actually agreed together at all in regard to the minor’s services, it was not possible to refer the assumpsit to any real agreement of a date later than that of the defendant’s supposed wrongful enticement, and not possible to infer that the assumpsit rested on a distinct arrangement, and left the original wrong as a ground for a separate suit.
The first action extended to the minor’s services from the beginning; and when the plaintiff brought it, he thereby virtually affirmed that his son was with defendant in virtue of a contract between the latter and himself, and not by means of conduct -vvhich was tortious against him.
His proceeding necessarily implied that defendant had the young man’s services during the time with plaintiff’s assent, and this was absolutely repugnant to the foundation of this suit, which is that the young man was drawn away and into defendant’s service against the plaintiff’s assent.
The case is, then, subject to the doctrine before stated, and the election involved in the first suit precluded the plaintiff from maintaining this action for the wrong. The charge on this subject was sufficiently favorable to the plaintiff, and as this feature of his case was fatal to his right to recover, the other points require no notice.
The judgment should be affirmed, with costs.